Want to learn even more? Here are 10 more things we learned about Dak Prescott on the trip to Haughton, La.:

1) How competitive he is

Marlon Seets thinks Cowboys fans and opponents will see another side of Prescott this season. He’s fiercely competitive, whether racing friends to the car door after practice, playing video games so intensely they have to stop to settle a spat or comparing whose shoes are nicer.

“People probably know he’s very poised, very mild-mannered, very easygoing, calm and cool,” said Seets, Prescott’s friend and the Ezekiel Elliott of his high school offense. “I think it’s going to come out that he’s an ultra-competitor, he’s a talker, talks trash.

“That’s one thing that’ll come out in his leadership role. I believe he’s going to talk a lot more now.”

What would Prescott say to high school opponents when they called him overrated during games?

“He might not say much, but he’d just say a little jab,” Seets said. “That’s what stings you the most. Because you won’t expect it from him.”

“People see it in the newspaper the next day and thought it was a basketball game,” Prescott’s friend and slot receiver Jordan Craft said. “They really did.”

Prescott and his friends’ response?

“That’s not basketball,” they said. “That’s them Haughton boys."

4) How he’s game

Prescott’s spades games growing up have been well chronicled. So, too, have his dominoes games in more recent years. Trent Jacobs, another friend and teammate, taught Prescott to play dominoes in Starkville, Miss., shortly before the draft. In no time, Prescott had caught on enough to win and to talk trash. Childhood friends also remember plenty of video games in the Prescott home, from NCAA football to Madden and 2K. They’d create their own characters to play.

There was plenty of playing football and basketball in the yard. Peggy Prescott, Dak’s late mother, gave unsolicited critiques.

“She’s not sugarcoating anything, not beating around the bush,” Craft said. “You’re going to have to learn to take it. What are you going to do? Stay down or get up?”

5) Size what?

Ashley Landis/Staff Photographer

A jersey with the number 6 hangs in the former locker of Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott on Tuesday, June 26, 2018 in Haughton, Louisiana. Prescott graduated from Haughton High School in 2010. He wore jersey number 6. (Ashley Landis/The Dallas Morning News).

Prescott’s friend and receiver Damon Gladney liked to hide the QB’s shoes in the locker room. One favorite hiding spot was behind the shoes of Haughton alum Jace Prescott, Dak’s older brother. Why was that effective? Jace, who’d played left tackle for Haughton at 6-5 and 400 pounds (but could still dunk) had size 24 shoes. His feet were so big the school had the New Orleans Saints design custom cleats to fit him.

6) How he psyched Parkway

Crosstown rivals Haughton and Parkway each were 9-0 leading up to the district title game Prescott’s senior year. Who would be crowned 2010 district champs? And could Haughton go undefeated in the regular season for the first time in school history?

8) How his recruiting might have gone differently

The Texas Longhorns recruited Belton quarterback David Ash as Prescott’s coaches sought to secure offers for him. Ash retired early from his college career because of concussions, pursuing his master’s in finance though he did return to work out in Texas’ Pro Day last year. Had Mack Brown offered Prescott on the recruiting trail, friends think he would’ve spent his college years in Austin. The Longhorns were Prescott’s favorite team growing up. One Prescott family member sent Texas a letter about the 4A Louisiana quarterback.

Explore a side of Cowboys QB Dak Prescott you haven't seen before, straight from his childhood friends

“He’d have gone to Texas, no question,” Jacobs said.

Unless they’d have offered him late, Jacobs reckoned. Prescott became increasingly committed to Mississippi State as time went on, showing loyalty to the first major program to believe in his talents.

“Loyalty means a lot to him,” Jacobs said.

9) How he breaks down film

The loyalty Prescott displayed during recruiting is still strong. Seven summers after Wilkerson, his QB coach, took Prescott on a tour of southern schools in hopes of securing a scholarship, the two still spend time together. Wilkerson stayed with Prescott in Dallas twice during June, Prescott taking his coach to an FC Dallas game. They also watched film together from Cowboys OTAs this spring.

“It was pretty neat and insightful,” Wilkerson said. “Not very often you get to sit around and talk football with one of the best quarterbacks in the league.”

Wilkerson offered feedback on Prescott’s film, while Prescott taught him a new tight end set for the spread. Wilkerson plans to simplify the concept and integrate it at Haughton this season.

10) How there recently were two of him

Prescott’s endorsement count keeps growing. He represents Tostito’s, Campbell’s Chunky Soup, Dannon yogurt, Nicholas Air, Adidas and more. He’s got so many deals that perhaps it’d be helpful if there were two of him.

Seets said in one commercial, recently, there were. Prescott had a stunt double.

“I was like Oh brother, exactly,” Seets laughed. “Dak, that’s what when you know you’ve made it.”

Prescott’s friends gave him a hard time about sitting back while another actor stepped in for the hard parts. But even that doesn’t get to his head, they say.

“Just joking with a little bit, all in fun,” Seets said. “To me, he’s just Dak.”